Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Remotely. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Remotely Quotes And Sayings by 96 Authors including Marlo Thomas,Daniel Goleman,Alan Moore,Peter James,S.l. Wallace for you to enjoy and share.
Despite our ever-connective technology, neither Skype nor Facebook - not even a telephone call - can come close to the joy of being with loved ones in person.
No birthday, concert, hangout session, or party can be enjoyed without taking the time to distance yourself from what you are doing to make sure that those in your digital world know instantly how much fun you are having.
I'm remote from most technology to the point that I'm kind of Amish.
Would be to start local. Assuming
Oh, I wonder if there's another way.-- S.l. Wallace
Once upon a time, in the not-so-distant past, very weird people were effectively isolated from all the other very weird people.
But today, the internet makes it possible for very weird people from anywhere on the planet to get on the internet and talk to one another.
Place. This is how
Most of the people nowadays send their things by internet. But I cannot work that way. I like to do it myself.
I live on my phone: I have a bunch of news and informational apps on there.
When we're online, we're often oblivious to everything else going on around us. The real world recedes as we process the flood of symbols and stimuli coming through our devices.
I routinely use my blue sky "Device" and it works very well for me.
From a security perspective, if you're connected, you're screwed.
Surfing the web often comes at the cost of face-to-face time with friends and family.
If you can use a Web browser, you can use Skype.
They have the Internet on computers now?
Unfortunately, real life doesn't have a remote control.
If I get a computer and I tune it to the Internet, it will pick up the Internet from the invisible realms that I can't see.
The reverse side of the coin in having this extraordinary ability to go anywhere, is that no one anywhere is remote any more.
Our information lives will be better served when we are free to get to our information from wherever we are, with any device available.
During the downtime on tour, I simply walk from room to room, staring into my computer.
This would involve disconnection - the computer equivalent of death. Despite
I've always been online and available to my fans.
Technology is your friend ... When it works.
This is one big problem with working remotely: no one believes you have a job at all.
I write on a computer, on a laptop or whatever.
I live, I shop almost exclusively on the Internet. I've bought cars on the Internet. I watch television, I do everything on it. I even watch my son online.
How the hell can you play here?
If you have a child, you'll notice they have two states: asleep or online.
Imagine you are writing an email. You are in front of the computer. You are operating the computer, clicking a mouse and typing on a keyboard, but the message will be sent to a human over the internet. So you are working before the computer, but with a human behind the computer.
Digital presentation is just television in public; we're all just getting together and watching TV without pointing the remote control at the screen.
Sitting behind a glass wall and having people do things on a computer - how realistic is that? We should be having conversations with people.
I am away so much, so I rarely see live TV, but I use iPlayer to catch programmes.
Today, smartphones, tablets, and the Internet have allowed people to conduct business from anywhere at any time. But as we continue to progress, many families find it harder to balance the ever-increasing demands of their work with their desire to care for and be with their family.
What would happen if our clothes were Internet-enabled? Can you imagine if you lost a sock? You could send out a search, and sock No. 3117 would respond that it's under the couch in the living room.
The Internet," [Judy] Singer said, "is a prosthetic device for people who can't socialize without it." For anyone challenged by language and social rules, a communication system that does not operate in real time is a godsend.
If you were away from home, you had to use a phone attached by a wire to the wall. It was terrible.
What we need is a plan B ... independent of the Internet. [It] doesn't necessarily have to have the performance of the Internet, but the police department has to be able to call up the fire department.
This is not a business where you can hand off and run by remote control.
You don't have to turn on the TV set. You don't have to work on the Internet. It's up to you.
Strive for Perfection" rdp
We need to substitute for the book a device that will make it easy to transmit information without transporting material.
If you're not networking, you're not networking.
Use state-of-the-heart technology online and offline to turn listeners into viral advocates and customers into raving fans.
I have already demonstrated, by crucial tests, the practicability of signaling by my system from one to any other point of the globe, no matter how remote, and I shall soon convert the disbelievers.
Everyday it gets easier to connect with an electronic device that it is to connect with real people.
People in a cluster are bound to each other automatically, and can see each other automatically.
Thank goodness modern convenience is a thing of the remote future.
Right now, offline and online are coming together because of smartphones.
The paintings are transferred from my computer to a disk, and I can hand it to the printer this way; or I can modem the painting to the printer over the phone lines from my house in Hawaii.
The typical computer network isn't like a house with windows, doors, and locks. It's more like a gauze tent encircled by a band of drunk teenagers with lit matches.
live TV. Broadcasts were at 5:00, 5:30,
Fortunately we have a product for people who aren't able to get some form of connectivity, it's called Xbox 360.
And so the idea was, well maybe you can take an Atari video game machine, where people plug in a game cartridge, and plug in a modem, and tie that into a telephone, and essentially turn that game in the machine into an interactive terminal.
Networking is rubbish; have friends instead.
Mobile phones ... they're not for communicating, they're for broadcasting. Broadcasting The Show Of Me.
Integral to the orb is our low cost long-range wireless radio data system and a protocol that allows us to send this data over 90% of the US population every 15 minutes throughout the day.
The next horizon will be deep integration of the physical and interactive worlds. The future of online is offline.
It will soon be possible to transmit wireless messages around the world so simply that any individual can carry and operate his own apparatus.
Facebook, from what I can tell, is the virtual equivalent of dropping into the homes of several million people, all of whom say at the same time: 'Hey! Let's set up the slide projector!'
Virtually any appliance is going to be online. Appliances will talk to each other and to the power-generation system. Our appliances will pay attention to our preferences.
I suppose the place where I live is fairly remote, it would seem remote to some people.
Capcom, or capsule communicator.
Somewhere there is a map of how it can be done.
I can direct dial today a man my parents warred with. They wanted to kill him, I want to sell software to him.
Another aspect of our work is multimedia teleconferencing.
I work on weekends, but from home.
It sounds a little extreme, but in this day and age, if your work isn't online, it doesn't exist.
You have to assume everything is going to end up online, even if you're alone in a hotel elevator.
For personal reasons, I do not browse the web from my computer. (I also have not net connection much of the time.) To look at page I send mail to a demon which runs wget and mails the page back to me. It is very efficient use of my time, but it is slow in real time.
Cyberspace is where you are when you're on the telephone.
If you are not on the web, you will have problems accessing services.
They call it 'surfing' the net. It's not surfing. It's typing in your bedroom
For people who like peace and quiet: a phoneless cord.
With our work at Kazaa, we began seeing growing broadband connections and more powerful computers and more streaming multimedia, and we saw that the traditional way of communicating by phone no longer made a lot of sense.
I study people by using electronics like proxy.
When you're NAT on the net, you're NOT on the net
with the CenturyLink Field faithful.
Everything is so tech now; everyone is so connected that way.
The Internet knows no national borders.
I'm a home-roamer and can't do study or office scenarios.
Advancements in technology have become so commonplace that sometimes we forget to stop and think about how incredible it is that a girl on her laptop in Texas can see photos and cell phone video in real time that a young college student has posted of a rally he's at in Iran.
Is there a way to to contact someone's computer with yours?"
"Yes. It's called email," Wyatt replied.
I know a lot of people in the retirement village that I have a house in in Florida that are on the Internet and are reading the paper on the Internet, and they're communicating on the Internet.
You'd be amazed how much quality collective thought can be captured using two simple tools: a voice connection and a shared screen.
Could Congress really do its work if it held its sessions by teleconferencing? Could the Supreme Court? Nothing can replace the spark of intelligence that travels from person to person at meetings.
I'm very excited about having the Internet in my den.
My last novel, 'The Keep,' was very explicitly technological, about the quality of living in a state constantly surrounded by disembodied presences, and I was thinking very much about the online experience.
Magic fucking phone.
In the early 1970s, phone phreaks manipulated the long-distance system using blue boxes that they built from sketchy photocopied schematics that were often riddled with errors. Not many had the skill to do this. Phreaking was restricted to a select few.
A fixation with connecting with 'friends' online comes with the risk of disconnection with friends waiting for you to be present in the offline world.
Skype is a much better way to keep in touch.
Marry your offline and online systems. So when you meet someone in person, make sure to connect with them online, too!
There's this corporate machine giving us a chance to access radio - though there's no guarantee.
Skype seems the best maybe, as international phone rates are silly. And service is service, that's definitely true. Any time there are two people involved, one of them becomes a server.
away from the car.
The way is in training.
The computer is the new fireplace, everyone in the family gathers around the digital hearth for warmth.
It doesn't matter if you can't get a cell phone signal or Wi-Fi where you are. You are always connected to Source.
A lot of things you want to do as part of daily life can now be done over the Internet.
Our friends through cables and computer screens are as real as the light and sound waves we alter through thought.